Pubdate: Tue, 02 Apr 2002
Source: Elizabethton Star (TN)
Copyright: 2002 Elizabethton Newspapers, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.starhq.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1478
Author: Kathy Helms-Hughes

'OPERATION HALF-SERIOUS' NO LAUGHING MATTER

Enterprising drug dealers who set up operations in the First Judicial 
District apparently took local law enforcement officials only 
half-serious when they previously warned they would actively pursue 
anyone selling narcotics.

"Now who's smiling?" Johnson City Police Chief Ron Street asked 
Monday afternoon following a press conference to announce that 15 
individuals had been arrested as a result of federal drug indictments 
in Greeneville.

Of the 15, six were from Johnson City, one from Erwin, seven from 
Burlington, N.C., and one from Roxboro, N.C. Each were charged with 
conspiring to commit federal crimes, including conspiracy to 
distribute crack cocaine. The arrests were the result of an ongoing, 
multi-agency investigation by federal, state and local drug task 
forces.

"This operation is named 'Operation Half-Serious,' " Chief Street 
said. "If you've been at any of these press releases we've done in 
the past, we've always spoke that we will be back, we will continue 
these operations, we will aggressively pursue anyone that's selling 
narcotics in the First Judicial District.

"It's quite obvious from having to stand here again today, that some 
of these people out there that have been arrested only took us 
half-serious. But I had the pleasure this morning of seeing some of 
those faces in Jonesborough Jail and I think they are beginning to 
understand now that we are serious."

According to Chief Street, a group centered primarily in the area of 
Burlington came to Johnson City and set up a drug-selling enterprise.

"We were also receiving information that in North Carolina they were 
being charged and the charges were being dismissed if they left the 
state. We feel like that's one of the reasons they've been ending up 
in Johnson City. Of course, we're not sending them anywhere, other 
than hopefully to some federal prison."

Street said the drug enterprise was based on the old adage of supply 
and demand. "I think they're into a town where they're in competition 
for the drug market. There's no doubt that the price here is higher 
than it is in some of the larger cities, so they sell less and make 
more. But again, I think today, when some of the people that I saw at 
the county jail start computing what they've sold, with the length of 
time that they've lost out of their lives, I think they're going to 
understand that they've made a very stupid business deal," he said.

Washington County Sheriff Fred Phillips said crack cocaine users 
often become addicted after using the drug once or twice. "It's not 
unusual for profiteers to come into an area and even give the drug 
away to the individuals and start and create a market -- and it is a 
very, very lucrative market. Big bucks are made by very young people.

"I can recall a few years back, a young man that was netting $40,000 
a month. He's now doing 20-some years in the federal penitentiary," 
Phillips said. "And that's the message we're trying to send to the 
young people: Yes, he's an idol in the community. He's got gold 
hanging all over him. But where's he at today? Where's he going to be 
for the next 22 years?"

District Attorney General Joe Crumley said that while some district 
attorneys are hesitant about taking cases federal, he is not. "Any 
time I've got a major dealer, I'm always going to call the U.S. 
Attorney's Office. Penalties are much stricter in the federal system. 
These guys are killing our children so they need to be put away and 
they need to be put away for a long time."

Chief Street said he is not real pleased with punishment handed down 
in local courts compared to the federal system. "I think we need to 
get tough on this; I think we need to put these people away.

"Some of them, if you start looking at their records, they are 
repetitious. They have been through this system many, many times and 
I think all of the courts and judges are going to have to get pretty 
strict on these and stop slapping them on the hand and do something 
to put them away," he said.

Sheriff Phillips said the multi-agency cooperation in Operation 
Half-Serious has been ongoing since last July. "I know we hear of 
problems in the community daily and there are those that think 
they're not being addressed; but rest assured that law enforcement -- 
local, state and federal and all of the prosecutors, are working 
daily to see that a stop is put to this."

Simultaneously, as the press conference was held in Johnson City, 
Burlington police were continuing a sweep of their area, and those 
arrested were being arraigned before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis 
Inman in U.S. District Court.

"They will be back in the Washington County Jail sometime this 
afternoon and their bonds will be such that those people will be with 
us for several months," Sheriff Phillips said. "They won't be out 
selling dope tomorrow, you can rest assured of that."

Chief Street said he often hears complaints from community residents 
about drug activity in their neighborhoods. "Of course, I'm sitting 
there trying to field their complaints and listen to them, but yet we 
can't be open with them about what undercover-type activities we have 
going, because any information of that nature could jeopardize the 
undercover officers' lives that are out there ... When we infiltrate 
these organizations we have to be very secretive about it and 
sometimes, unfortunately, we can't let the public know what we're 
doing."

Those arrested Monday face 10 years to life imprisonment and fines up 
to $4 million under the federal statute. "That should show the 
severity of the offenses that they have committed," Chief Street 
said, reiterating the same warning he and fellow officers have made 
previously:

"We will be continuing to aggressively enforce the laws, especially 
the narcotics laws in this region, and these people that think they 
are going to come into this area and set up a drug market and operate 
it freely, are making a serious mistake. We don't intend to go away, 
we just now seem to be getting good at what we're doing."
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